The last owners of Chalkwell Hall, the Mason and Bear families, decided to sell their estate just as the nineteenth century was coming to a close, and on 28 June 1899 it was purchased for development by the Chalkwell Hall Estate Syndicate for £100,000 (circa £11,060,000 today). However, 26 acres, including the house itself, was purchased by Southend Council for use as a public park – now known as Chalkwell Park.
Members of the Chalkwell Hall Estate Syndicate were seasoned developers, with at least two, Richard Chadwick and Stefano Gatti, working on large projects in London at the same time they were developing Chalkwell.
They appear to have come under influence of the Garden Suburb principle (see Useful Information and Links) and to have been inspired by it. The greatest influence on modern planning at the time, and arguably today, was the Garden City movement as described by Sir Ebenezer Howard in his book Garden Cities of Tomorrow published in 1902, and subsequently amended in 1912.
Southend Council clearly supported this vision, having purchased the land to form Chalkwell Park - one of the fundamental principles of a garden suburb being that it should have a public park and open spaces.
Garden suburbs were envisaged as spokes of a wheel radiating from a town or city. The target residents were the newly prosperous merchant and affluent professional classes. The idea was to encourage them to remain close to the town or city rather than move to the countryside. Housing stock was to be of low density with a maximum of 12 families per acre.
In many respects, Chalkwell mirrors Thorpe Bay, which, instead of being provided with a public park, instead had 80 acres turned into a golf course. Both, it may be argued, are garden suburbs. Spokes which are wards at the western and eastern ends of Southend.
The garden suburb was to be for residential use only, with the exception of doctors and lawyers who were permitted to have their practices at their homes. Commerce and industry were restricted to the town. Chalkwell has maintained this. Within the current ward boundary, there are easily accessible retail areas which service residents at the Ridgeway, Leigh Road, Station Road and London Road. However, they are all located at perimeters of the ward so it is overwhelmingly maintained for leisure use.
The garden suburb houses were to be bright, architecturally and imaginatively designed, with generous gardens situated within areas of natural beauty, fresh air, and healthy environments. The gardens were to be of high quality and located in relatively wide, tree-lined streets incorporating grass and shrub verges in many roads. Chalkwell reflects this, with shrub verges seen in numerous roads, for example, in Chalkwell Avenue, Imperial Avenue, Meadway, Hall Park Avenue, Crosby Road and the Ridgeway, while many others feature grass verges.
With, in addition, Chalkwell Park providing 26 acres of green leisure space, the tree-filled Ridgeway Green, along with plentiful outdoor leisure opportunities provided by two bowls clubs, several tennis clubs and the estuary, the area can claim to match the description of a Garden City.
***
Plans for new houses had to be submitted for approval and the houses were to be built to a minimum value as judged by the surveyors. Covenants were put in place to restrict the usage and expansion of homes to retain their individual character and the characteristics of Chalkwell. For information about Chalkwell covenants today, please see the Chalkwell Covenants page Chalkwell Ward Residents Association - Chalkwell Covenants .
© Chalkwell Ward Residents Association, 2026